1.
Keep your temper. A decision made in anger is never sound.
Ford Frick
2.
Hear only the things you should hear - be deaf to others.
Ford Frick
3.
Take pride in your work at all times. Remember, respect for an umpire is created off the field as well as on.
Ford Frick
4.
I don’t care if half the league strikes. Those who do will encounter quick retribution. All will be suspended, and I don’t care if it wrecks the league for 10 years. This is the United States of America, and one citizen has as much right to play as another.
Ford Frick
5.
I'd hate this to get out but I really like opera.
Ford Frick
6.
Keep all your personalities out of your work. Forget and forgive.
Ford Frick
7.
Keep your eye on the ball.
Ford Frick
8.
Never charge a player and, above all, no pointing your finger or yelling.
Ford Frick
9.
Review your work. You will find, if you are honest, that 90% of the trouble is traceable to loafing.
Ford Frick
10.
Avoid sarcasm. Don't insist on the last word.
Ford Frick
11.
Baseball is probably the world's best documented sport.
Ford Frick
12.
Baseball has always been slow to accept change. Only through dire pressure can any radical change be accomplished. The move of the Giants and Dodgers from New York to California brought that pressure in abundance.
Ford Frick
13.
I cannot but feel that the one man, above all others, who deserves the eternal thanks of his own race, and all thinking people, for bringing about baseball’s greatest reform, is Jackie Robinson himself…Certainly baseball people should be eternally grateful for the contribution he made to his own people, and to the game.
Ford Frick